‘Pricey’ household brands being left on the shelf

May 11, 2016 5:53 pm

Shoppers are shunning some household-name grocery brands because they believe their products are too expensive, with some even branding them boring and outdated.
That is according to research from creative communications agency Southpaw, which asked 1,000 UK-based consumers which brands they buy less frequently now than they did five years ago, or have even stopped buying altogether.
Some 14% cited Cadbury’s, followed by Birds Eye and Heinz (both 12%), while other brands which feature in the top 10 include Coca-Cola, Walkers Crisps, Mr Kipling, Ribena, PG Tips, Kingsmill and Robinsons.
Although a number of these brands are still bought more than once a month by other respondents, a proportion of people are more regularly leaving items on the shelf during their shopping trips and online orders.
Shoppers were also asked to choose from a list of words they felt best described the products they now spend less on than they did half a decade ago. Of those who selected a description, the word most commonly associated with these brands is ‘expensive’.
Other reasons for brands falling out of favour with consumers are that they’re considered ‘outdated’ and even ‘boring’.
Southpaw group managing director Tom Poynter said: “There is a warning sign in the results of our survey for some well-known brands. The theme of the responses is that people believe the products they buy less of are expensive. Even if that isn’t actually the case, there is a key marketing issue at the heart of these findings: the brand isn’t justifying the product cost.
“This is something all marketers need to be aware of. Sustaining the price point is a critical job of any brand and that clearly isn’t happening here. There’s work to be done on refreshing the brands in question, in order to change perceptions and help improve sales performance.”

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